Go kiting to :

Seco Island

Caticlan - Philippines

Spot Type
Flat

Water
Crystal Clear

Beach
Sand

Rider Lever
beginner

Spot characteristics

Spot Type

Flat

Rider Skill

beginner

Crowd

No People on the Spot

Beach Type

Sand

Water Quality

Crystal Clear

Tide Influence

Tide independent

Description of Seco Island (Philippines)

Seco Island is about as stripped back as a kitesurfing destination gets. A small uninhabited sandbar sitting roughly 50 kilometers west of Panay in the Sulu Sea, it offers nothing in the way of permanent infrastructure or facilities, and that absence is precisely what makes it special. The sandbank stretches approximately 400 meters long and 100 meters wide, with shallow flat water surrounding it and no trees, structures, or terrain features to interrupt the wind flow. The result is consistent and clean conditions across the entire area that work for beginners, intermediate riders, and advanced kitesurfers alike, with the freedom to navigate in any wind direction without having to worry about obstacles or hazards.

The best season runs from November to April when northeast winds deliver reliable conditions across the Sulu Sea. The complete flatness of the sandbar and the unobstructed wind make Seco an unusually pure environment for skill progression, where the only variables are the rider and the kite rather than the complexity of the spot itself. Sunsets from the sandbar are genuinely spectacular, and the absence of any light pollution turns the night sky into something that riders who have only ever stayed in developed destinations will find striking.

Since the island is uninhabited, trips to Seco are typically organized from Boracay and structured around either camping on the sandbar or staying aboard the boat. These organized trips generally include food and beverages, which takes the logistical complexity out of what would otherwise require significant independent planning. The journey from Boracay is part of the experience, and arriving at a sandbar in the middle of the Sulu Sea with kites ready to fly carries a sense of adventure that more accessible spots simply cannot replicate.

For everything else that a kitesurfing trip requires beyond the sessions themselves, Boracay serves as the natural base and provides the full range of restaurants, nightlife, and tourist activities including snorkeling and island hopping that make it one of the most visited islands in the Philippines. The island of Panay is also within reach for those interested in exploring beyond the immediate area and adds further options for riders who want to extend their time in the region.

Spot Gallery (4)

Spot best suited for

Spot profile

Travel spot

The typical kite travel destination, it is known for its great conditions, and kiters from around the world come here for their vacations.

Adventure spot

That dream place out of the normal touristic routes. Once you reach it, you feel in paradise, it can be anything extraordinary, a hidden gem, remote and fascinating.

Equipment

No wetsuit is needed due to warm water conditions; booties may be useful for protection against sharp objects.

Wind Conditions

Main wind directions

% of Windy days per month

Wind Speed Range

From 15 to 25 Knots



Suggested sizes

8 - 9 mt

10 - 11 mt

12 - 13 mt

Forecast on Windy.com

Dangers

Reef nearby, so caution is necessary. Safety boats are often present during organized trips.

Location

Map

spot map
Open in Google Maps

Closest City

Caticlan

How to get There

To reach Seco Island, fly from Manila to Caticlan, then proceed to Boracay. From there, join a kitesurfing safari or hire a boat to reach the island.

Access

public

What to do besides kitesurfing

Time spent on Seco Island away from the kite has a character entirely its own. Without the distractions of restaurants, bars, or any kind of built environment, the evenings on the sandbar slow down naturally into something that feels genuinely rare. Watching the sunset from a flat sandbar in the middle of the Sulu Sea with nothing interrupting the horizon in any direction is the kind of experience that stays with a person long after the trip is over, and the stargazing that follows on a clear night, far from any light pollution, adds another dimension to what makes an overnight stay on Seco worth organizing.

For everything beyond that simplicity, Boracay is the natural extension of a Seco Island trip and sits close enough to reach without difficulty. The full range of restaurants, beach bars, and nightlife that has made Boracay one of the most visited islands in the Philippines is all readily available, and activities like snorkeling and island hopping can be easily arranged through the many operators based there. The contrast between a night camping on an uninhabited sandbar and an evening on Boracay's White Beach is as stark as contrasts get, and experiencing both within the same trip gives a surprisingly complete picture of what this part of the Philippines has to offer.

The island of Panay, sitting not far from Seco, provides additional options for riders who want to explore further and add some cultural or inland experiences to what is otherwise a trip defined by water, wind, and open sky.

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